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NOTE: When providing a source, please provide a very brief summary on what it's about and what purpose it adds to the discussion. The supporting statement should clearly explain why the subject is relevant and needs to be discussed. Please follow this rule especially for tweets.
Your supporting statement should always come BEFORE you provide the source. |
On May 19 2021 16:36 Broetchenholer wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:16 cLutZ wrote:On May 19 2021 15:51 KwarK wrote: You’ve still failed to address the issue with your claim of Hamas using human shields which is that there isn’t anywhere for them to launch rockets from that doesn’t have civilians nearby. How exactly would you like Hamas to launch their rockets? They’re not hiding behind civilians, they’re a militia that live among civilians and do not have access to military installations. Hamas *does* have the option of exclusively targeting military, even if I accepted your framing (I don't, previously I've see google maps of the strip, and there are unoccupied areas, just if they were used it would be a tactical disaster because drones would get them before a single rocket ever fired). They do not target military bases and other hard, legitimate wartime targets, as a general rule. By targeting civilians, they really do make it an untenable situation for Israel not to retaliate. If they targeted military bases your argument would be much stronger. Also, no one has addressed the issue that the Gaza plan of 2005 was supposed to be the model solution. Israel gave them that land to govern, and the idea was it would become the stable "State of Gaza" and then, if Sharon had his way, they'd do something similar in West Bank, and the 3 state solution would happen. Instead the Gaza plan was a failure. Its failure, caused Sharon to leave Likud, then he had a stroke, and the lack of a competent Sharon replacement, and the Gaza plan's obvious failure caused a 15 year rightward shift in Israeli politics. To say otherwise is akin to saying gas lines and stagflation had nothing to do with Reagan winning and Bill Clinton's "triangulation". This abject policy failure it the seminal moment in Israeli public opinion shifts. If your stance is that giving Gaza to the Arabs was a failure, can you elaborate why? As far as i understand it, they simply changed a policed prison into a prison with no guards but tanks and machine guns on the outside, absolving themselves from any responsibility of what happens insight. Then they argued that as Hamas had now control over that zone, they didn't have to let any goods into that zone they did not want. Like cement. You know, something 2 million people definetly do not need. In what way do you believe the gaza strip could have become a success?
Gaza was, like I said, a trial for the 2 state (really always 3 state, see how the East/West Pakistan plan failed and now we have Pakistan + Bangladesh) wherein the Gaza was intended to slowly be given increased freedom and controls and evolve into a full country so long as it continually proved itself to not be an outsized terrorist threat. What happened, immediately, was the opposite. While the plan succeeded in reducing IDF casualties because they weren't sitting targets amid a hostile populace, they elected Hamas, and rocket activity was not reduced. This meant Israel couldn't justify lifting any of its blockade measures because Hamas would appropriate all relevant useful materials (like concrete) for its own means (which they still do).
Also, Israel, like any country has the right to defend a border. Its not correct to call a place a "prison" just because none of the neighboring states want to accept your citizens as immigrants or workers. Remember, Egypt has made the same exact call vis-a-vis the inhabitants of Gaza. Its not a unilateral Israeli choice, Egypt is always a theoretical option for Gazans (as is Jordan for the West Bank) but neither of those countries wants those people crossing the border either. For immigration, or transient work.
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United States41548 Posts
On May 19 2021 16:43 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:13 Broetchenholer wrote: Dear Magic Powers, did you just say that that the deliberate bombing of a non military target, maximised to kill the population and destroy the civilian infrastructure with no military value except for terror, like the bombing run on Dresden and others, is the fault of the Germans? Are you sure? Not the fault of "the Germans", but the fault of "Germany", i.e. the German leadership, which is the Nazis, Hitler being the head of it. Show nested quote +So, your position is, if Israel would start blasting Gaza with speakers saying "As long as you keep firing rockets, this will continue!" and then proceeds to drop explosive bombs followed by incendiary bombs into one sector of Gaza. And then the next sector. And the next. And the next. Until there is either no Gaza left, or there are no rockets flying into Israel anymore. There's context missing from your question. Depending on whether or not Hamas has sent rocket strikes prior to Israel "blasting Gaza" as you put it, and depending on what targets Israel would choose in retaliation to those strikes, the answer that I'd give would change depending on that information. Show nested quote +This would be the responsibility of Hamas for firing rockets into israel and no blame would go to the IDF? And if that is not okay, why do you think Dresden was okay? Would you allow for Dresden again? Germany (not Germans, see my response to the first paragraph) had been waging an aggressive war against Britain and other countries, including the heavy bombardment of innocent and defenseless British towns that were not militarily relevant locations in order to kill and frustrate the population. Britain had no choice other than to retaliate with full force. What should else should Britain have done? Germany was committing war crime after war crime and conquering land after land, showing no regard for the lives of innocent people. Tell me what better options Britain had. The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm.
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On May 19 2021 16:43 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:13 Broetchenholer wrote: Dear Magic Powers, did you just say that that the deliberate bombing of a non military target, maximised to kill the population and destroy the civilian infrastructure with no military value except for terror, like the bombing run on Dresden and others, is the fault of the Germans? Are you sure? Not the fault of "the Germans", but the fault of "Germany", i.e. the German leadership, which is the Nazis, Hitler being the head of it. Show nested quote +So, your position is, if Israel would start blasting Gaza with speakers saying "As long as you keep firing rockets, this will continue!" and then proceeds to drop explosive bombs followed by incendiary bombs into one sector of Gaza. And then the next sector. And the next. And the next. Until there is either no Gaza left, or there are no rockets flying into Israel anymore. There's context missing from your question. Depending on whether or not Hamas has sent rocket strikes prior to Israel "blasting Gaza" as you put it, and depending on what targets Israel would choose in retaliation to those strikes, the answer that I'd give would change depending on that information. Show nested quote +This would be the responsibility of Hamas for firing rockets into israel and no blame would go to the IDF? And if that is not okay, why do you think Dresden was okay? Would you allow for Dresden again? Germany (not Germans, see my response to the first paragraph) had been waging an aggressive war against Britain and other countries, including the heavy bombardment of innocent and defenseless British towns that were not militarily relevant locations in order to kill and frustrate the population. Britain had no choice other than to retaliate with full force. What should else should Britain have done? Germany was committing war crime after war crime and conquering land after land, showing no regard for the lives of innocent people. Tell me what better options Britain had.
Are you a serious person? Like, i have given you so many outs there and you ignored them all and went full "killing civilians is fine". The way i interpret your posts, and franky all of them, you don't see any nuance at all. There is a good side and there is a bad side. As long as the bad side exists, the good side is absolved of any resposibility whatsoever.
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On May 19 2021 16:40 KwarK wrote: Settlements absolutely kill people. That’s why they bring guns. I'll have to request citation for that.
If you’re back to denying that Israel is killing people then you need to update your understanding of the conflict. They absolutely are. I thought we were past this. I never agreed that Israel kills civilians, so I can't "go back to denying". I disagree with your framing of Israel's actions, you'll have to find a more convincing argument if you want me to change my mind.
Imagine you and a friend were hugging under a bridge and that I stood on the bridge and dropped a water balloon. I wanted to get only you wet but I knew when I dropped it that it would get both of you wet and I accepted that outcome (both of you getting wet) as long as you got wet. After dropping the water balloon it landed directly on your friend’s head and burst, splashing you both. As you got wet this was a successful operation. If I’m understanding you correctly you would argue that because my purpose was to get you wet then I did not drop a water balloon on your friend. Is this correct? It's not obvious to me how this pertains exactly to the Israel-Palestine conflict. Who is who in this scenario?
If not, please explain the difference between that and your insistence that an Israeli jet that drops a bomb that lands on civilians did not drop a bomb on civilians. There's a difference between a matter-of-fact statement and one that describes the motives of the involved parties. If you're including the motive (retaliatory action against Hamas AND accepting civilian casualties), then Israel isn't dropping bombs on civilians. If you're talking matter-of-fact, then a jet dropped a bomb on people (which would have all the relevant information removed and would therefore not be honest). The problem with the framing lies in the fact that every involved party has a backstory that does or doesn't relate to the matter-of-fact situation. If you're honest about the backstory, then you have to frame the act of bombing people in the right way. This means you have to include all relevant information about the involved parties, that are: - The parties ordering and executing the bombing attack (the Israeli government/military) - The parties receiving the bombing attack (Hamas on the one hand and civilians on the other hand) This makes for three involved parties, not two. Leaving out Hamas from the framing should make it immediately obvious that it's a dishonest framing. If you only included relevant information for one of the parties, or if you left out relevant information for one of the parties, then you'd be doing an incomplete framing of the situation. The relevant information must also come in the correct order, because the Israeli military doesn't prioritize civilian targets and then accepts Hamas casualties as well, it goes the opposite way. Therefore: "Israel is bombing Hamas AND Israel also accepts civilian casualties in the process" If you say it like this, however: "Israel is bombing civilians", then you're leaving out that Hamas is the target and has priority, as without Hamas being the target Israel wouldn't have sent bombs that kill civilians.
I agree that Hamas should not be firing rockets at civilians. That’s beside the point which was whether they were using human shields. You asserted they were. Defend your assertion. I already gave sources, what more do you want? It's not a question that's definitively settled. I take the side that they do use human shields considering that they appear to be completely fine accepting civilian casualties as a direct and indirect result of their actions.
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On May 19 2021 17:01 Broetchenholer wrote: Are you a serious person? Like, i have given you so many outs there and you ignored them all and went full "killing civilians is fine". Citation needed, where did I condone the killing of civilians?
The way i interpret your posts, and franky all of them, you don't see any nuance at all. There is a good side and there is a bad side. As long as the bad side exists, the good side is absolved of any resposibility whatsoever. You can believe that if you want. It's not the way I view things, but I can't force you to change your mind about me.
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United States41548 Posts
On May 19 2021 17:07 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:40 KwarK wrote: Settlements absolutely kill people. That’s why they bring guns. I'll have to request citation for that. Show nested quote +If you’re back to denying that Israel is killing people then you need to update your understanding of the conflict. They absolutely are. I thought we were past this. I never agreed that Israel kills civilians, so I can't "go back to denying". I disagree with your framing of Israel's actions, you'll have to find a more convincing argument if you want me to change my mind. Show nested quote +Imagine you and a friend were hugging under a bridge and that I stood on the bridge and dropped a water balloon. I wanted to get only you wet but I knew when I dropped it that it would get both of you wet and I accepted that outcome (both of you getting wet) as long as you got wet. After dropping the water balloon it landed directly on your friend’s head and burst, splashing you both. As you got wet this was a successful operation. If I’m understanding you correctly you would argue that because my purpose was to get you wet then I did not drop a water balloon on your friend. Is this correct? It's not obvious to me how this pertains exactly to the Israel-Palestine conflict. Who is who in this scenario? Show nested quote +If not, please explain the difference between that and your insistence that an Israeli jet that drops a bomb that lands on civilians did not drop a bomb on civilians. There's a difference between a matter-of-fact statement and one that describes the motives of the involved parties. If you're including the motive (retaliatory action against Hamas AND accepting civilian casualties), then Israel isn't dropping bombs on civilians. If you're talking matter-of-fact, then a jet dropped a bomb on people (which would have all the relevant information removed and would therefore not be honest). The problem with the framing lies in the fact that every involved party has a backstory that does or doesn't relate to the matter-of-fact situation. If you're honest about the backstory, then you have to frame the act of bombing people in the right way. This means you have to include all relevant information about the involved parties, that are: - The parties ordering and executing the bombing attack (the Israeli government/military) - The parties receiving the bombing attack (Hamas on the one hand and civilians on the other hand) This makes for three involved parties, not two. Leaving out Hamas from the framing should make it immediately obvious that it's a dishonest framing. If you only included relevant information for one of the parties, or if you left out relevant information for one of the parties, then you'd be doing an incomplete framing of the situation. The relevant information must also come in the correct order, because the Israeli military doesn't prioritize civilian targets and then accepts Hamas casualties as well, it goes the opposite way. Therefore: "Israel is bombing Hamas AND Israel also accepts civilian casualties in the process" If you say it like this, however: "Israel is bombing civilians", then you're leaving out that Hamas is the target and has priority, as without Hamas being the target Israel wouldn't have sent bombs that kill civilians. Show nested quote +I agree that Hamas should not be firing rockets at civilians. That’s beside the point which was whether they were using human shields. You asserted they were. Defend your assertion. I already gave sources, what more do you want? It's not a question that's definitively settled. I take the side that they do use human shields considering that they appear to be completely fine accepting civilian casualties as a direct and indirect result of their actions. In the first situation Israel drops a bomb on civilians while aiming at Hamas. In the second one I drop a water balloon on your friend while aiming at you. Are you sure you need me to explain which person represents which group? I can if you like but I feel like you can probably work it out if you think on it.
A factual description would be “the Israeli jet dropped a bomb on a building which contained Hamas militants and civilians”. A non factual description would be “the Israeli jet dropped a bomb on Hamas and also Israel accepts civilian casualties”.
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On May 19 2021 16:50 KwarK wrote: The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm.
Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain. They played very dirty by bombing innocent, defenseless civilians, and the war was close to being lost for Britain numerous times. Defeat would've meant absolute disaster for Britain and perhaps the world, as Hitler made no secret about his terrifying plans. And it wasn't just the Nazis, as Japan was a convenient ally of the Third Reich, and they weren't up to anything good either. Germany was also coming dangerously close to attaining nuclear powers. What Britain did to Germany in WW2 was a desperate attempt at saving humankind from a worse fate. They had to make decisions that went far beyond anything prior. If you think this is even remotely comparable to the Israel-Hamas situation, then I'll have to end our debate.
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On May 19 2021 17:14 KwarK wrote: In the first situation Israel drops a bomb on civilians while aiming at Hamas. In the second one I drop a water balloon on your friend while aiming at you. Are you sure you need me to explain which person represents which group? I can if you like but I feel like you can probably work it out if you think on it.
Yes, please explain it. I think you're not aware that your example lacks nuance that exists in the Israel-Hamas conflict.
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On May 19 2021 15:59 Jockmcplop wrote: The fact that you will compare the utter, absolute destruction of Palestinian lives on daily basis with stealing someone's lunch money pretty much sums up your whole argument here.
You seem determined to minimize the oppression of the Palestinian people to the point where I can only assume you are completely uninformed on the actual scale of the problem.
Apparently you didn't get the point of the question. Proportionality wasn't the point. It was about the direction of action. The point was to demonstrate that some forms of retaliatory action constitute self-defense, and others do not, depending on where to the action is directed.
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On May 19 2021 16:48 cLutZ wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:36 Broetchenholer wrote:On May 19 2021 16:16 cLutZ wrote:On May 19 2021 15:51 KwarK wrote: You’ve still failed to address the issue with your claim of Hamas using human shields which is that there isn’t anywhere for them to launch rockets from that doesn’t have civilians nearby. How exactly would you like Hamas to launch their rockets? They’re not hiding behind civilians, they’re a militia that live among civilians and do not have access to military installations. Hamas *does* have the option of exclusively targeting military, even if I accepted your framing (I don't, previously I've see google maps of the strip, and there are unoccupied areas, just if they were used it would be a tactical disaster because drones would get them before a single rocket ever fired). They do not target military bases and other hard, legitimate wartime targets, as a general rule. By targeting civilians, they really do make it an untenable situation for Israel not to retaliate. If they targeted military bases your argument would be much stronger. Also, no one has addressed the issue that the Gaza plan of 2005 was supposed to be the model solution. Israel gave them that land to govern, and the idea was it would become the stable "State of Gaza" and then, if Sharon had his way, they'd do something similar in West Bank, and the 3 state solution would happen. Instead the Gaza plan was a failure. Its failure, caused Sharon to leave Likud, then he had a stroke, and the lack of a competent Sharon replacement, and the Gaza plan's obvious failure caused a 15 year rightward shift in Israeli politics. To say otherwise is akin to saying gas lines and stagflation had nothing to do with Reagan winning and Bill Clinton's "triangulation". This abject policy failure it the seminal moment in Israeli public opinion shifts. If your stance is that giving Gaza to the Arabs was a failure, can you elaborate why? As far as i understand it, they simply changed a policed prison into a prison with no guards but tanks and machine guns on the outside, absolving themselves from any responsibility of what happens insight. Then they argued that as Hamas had now control over that zone, they didn't have to let any goods into that zone they did not want. Like cement. You know, something 2 million people definetly do not need. In what way do you believe the gaza strip could have become a success? Gaza was, like I said, a trial for the 2 state (really always 3 state, see how the East/West Pakistan plan failed and now we have Pakistan + Bangladesh) wherein the Gaza was intended to slowly be given increased freedom and controls and evolve into a full country so long as it continually proved itself to not be an outsized terrorist threat. What happened, immediately, was the opposite. While the plan succeeded in reducing IDF casualties because they weren't sitting targets amid a hostile populace, they elected Hamas, and rocket activity was not reduced. This meant Israel couldn't justify lifting any of its blockade measures because Hamas would appropriate all relevant useful materials (like concrete) for its own means (which they still do). Also, Israel, like any country has the right to defend a border. Its not correct to call a place a "prison" just because none of the neighboring states want to accept your citizens as immigrants or workers. Remember, Egypt has made the same exact call vis-a-vis the inhabitants of Gaza. Its not a unilateral Israeli choice, Egypt is always a theoretical option for Gazans (as is Jordan for the West Bank) but neither of those countries wants those people crossing the border either. For immigration, or transient work.
First, Gaza is not a souvereign state. If it was, your argument might make more sense, but it's not. As they are not a souvereign state, Israel can treat them as their territory without anybody stopping them, so they control all trade routes into Gaza, be it via land or sea. If you set up an area to not be able to support themselves, they will not be able to support themselves. If you tell someone you will free them if they just behave and then keep treating them in a way that makes it impossible for them to behave, you cannot turn around and say "see, they were not able to behave". Now they are locked up forever. And sharing the blame with Egypt does not absolve israel from this.
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There is one cool thing about the Israel-Palestine conflict, and it's that the discourse has shifted dramatically. Last time this happened we had the discussion online and there were people making solid arguments on both sides, we had a little battle on the marketplace of ideas, and the people on the side of Palestine won that battle.
Which means that this time, support for Palestine is overwhelming in leftist places online. So, what can I say, when you're dealing with honest people who have a common goal, debate works, sort of. Leftist online places are set to raise more for Palestine than they did for Mermaids when Glinner decided to direct his constant transphobia at them. Especially Vaush has had a very successful stream, 250k+ in 24 hours.
Will charity solve the occupation, no it won't obviously. But it still signals that we have a pretty large voice, and that's cool. Other cracks start to form with larger protests all over the world, less pro-Israel propaganda in the media than usual (I have no explanation for that one but 1) hey, cool, I'll take it, and 2) there is still some dumb shit going around.
Imo one of the more important rhetorical battles to fight is the battle against the idea that it's complicated. One side has almost all of the power and chooses to oppress the other, openly using terrorism and openly supporting ethnic cleansing. Don't be on that side.
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United States41548 Posts
On May 19 2021 17:15 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:50 KwarK wrote: The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm. Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain. They played very dirty by bombing innocent, defenseless civilians, and the war was close to being lost for Britain numerous times. Defeat would've meant absolute disaster for Britain and perhaps the world, as Hitler made no secret about his terrifying plans. And it wasn't just the Nazis, as Japan was a convenient ally of the Third Reich, and they weren't up to anything good either. Germany was also coming dangerously close to attaining nuclear powers. What Britain did to Germany in WW2 was a desperate attempt at saving humankind from a worse fate. They had to make decisions that went far beyond anything prior. If you think this is even remotely comparable to the Israel-Hamas situation, then I'll have to end our debate. To be clear, are you now arguing that the firebombing of Dresden prevented Hitler from getting nuclear weapons? If not, what the hell are you talking about?
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On May 19 2021 17:20 Broetchenholer wrote:
First, Gaza is not a souvereign state. If it was, your argument might make more sense, but it's not. As they are not a souvereign state, Israel can treat them as their territory without anybody stopping them, so they control all trade routes into Gaza, be it via land or sea. If you set up an area to not be able to support themselves, they will not be able to support themselves. If you tell someone you will free them if they just behave and then keep treating them in a way that makes it impossible for them to behave, you cannot turn around and say "see, they were not able to behave". Now they are locked up forever. And sharing the blame with Egypt does not absolve israel from this.
Gaza could easily be a sovereign state today (I actually think it is) by any standard if it had not engaged in immediate terrorism after the 2005 plan. The US could stop all trade into Cuba right now if we wanted, we did under the Kennedy regime, that didn't make Cuba not a state.
The fact that other Arab states treat them equally is an indictment of their own problems outweighing whatever else is going on with respect to Israel. If Israel lifted its blockade, the only result any reasonable person would expect is more bunkers and rockets, not more schools and hospitals.
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On May 19 2021 17:15 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 16:50 KwarK wrote: The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm. Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain. They played very dirty by bombing innocent, defenseless civilians, and the war was close to being lost for Britain numerous times. Defeat would've meant absolute disaster for Britain and perhaps the world, as Hitler made no secret about his terrifying plans. And it wasn't just the Nazis, as Japan was a convenient ally of the Third Reich, and they weren't up to anything good either. Germany was also coming dangerously close to attaining nuclear powers. What Britain did to Germany in WW2 was a desperate attempt at saving humankind from a worse fate. They had to make decisions that went far beyond anything prior. If you think this is even remotely comparable to the Israel-Hamas situation, then I'll have to end our debate.
Are you sure you know what you are talking about? The bombings of Dresden took place between the 13th and 15th of February of 1945. Your argumentation for willfully killing ~25000 civilians without any direct military value was "Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain"??? 2 weeks after the bombardment, allied troops reached what is now Germany. 2 Weeks before the bombing, russian troops stood 80 km east of berlin. This is your problem, you reduce the responsibility to they started it and allow the defender then to do whatever they want. That, or you just do not know what you are talking about.
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On May 19 2021 17:25 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 17:15 Magic Powers wrote:On May 19 2021 16:50 KwarK wrote: The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm. Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain. They played very dirty by bombing innocent, defenseless civilians, and the war was close to being lost for Britain numerous times. Defeat would've meant absolute disaster for Britain and perhaps the world, as Hitler made no secret about his terrifying plans. And it wasn't just the Nazis, as Japan was a convenient ally of the Third Reich, and they weren't up to anything good either. Germany was also coming dangerously close to attaining nuclear powers. What Britain did to Germany in WW2 was a desperate attempt at saving humankind from a worse fate. They had to make decisions that went far beyond anything prior. If you think this is even remotely comparable to the Israel-Hamas situation, then I'll have to end our debate. To be clear, are you now arguing that the firebombing of Dresden prevented Hitler from getting nuclear weapons? If not, what the hell are you talking about?
I'm arguing Britain had a lot greater fears during WW2 than Israel in its conflict with Hamas. The Nazis turned Germany and all Germans (and other nations) into a single-minded war factory, every single citizen was involved in the war in some capacity, and those who weren't involved got exploited for the sake of war. There was nothing else. "Total war" is a term that stems from that time. "Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg?" ("Do you want total war?") is in a speech from Goebbels after Germany had failed to conquer Russia numerous times. Britain, knowing this, had to take very drastic actions. It's not even remotely comparable to anything today. The bombing of Dresden is a hotly debated issue among historians, with some taking the stance that it was a war crime and others arguing that it had strategic relevance. I think they're both partially right, which means I think it's right to label the mission a war crime, and it's also right that - without needless attacks on civilians - it would've simply been essential to the British war efforts. It needs to be said though that the British had faced an enemy who could've defeated them, who had conquered much of the world, who could've conquered much more of the world, an enemy who was terrifyingly brutal to civilians everywhere. With the prospect of losing a war to such an enemy, it can't be compared 1:1 to Hamas. At least Hamas is mainly using retaliation, as much as I or anyone else disagrees with their reasoning or methods. Germany wasn't retaliating.
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On May 19 2021 17:35 Broetchenholer wrote: Are you sure you know what you are talking about? The bombings of Dresden took place between the 13th and 15th of February of 1945. Your argumentation for willfully killing ~25000 civilians without any direct military value was "Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain"??? 2 weeks after the bombardment, allied troops reached what is now Germany. 2 Weeks before the bombing, russian troops stood 80 km east of berlin. This is your problem, you reduce the responsibility to they started it and allow the defender then to do whatever they want. That, or you just do not know what you are talking about.
The bombing started in 1944. What you're talking about is the height of the mission.
Also, I'm not even defending Britain on this issue. When did I defend their actions? I'm just putting things into perspective, showing that it's not comparable to Israel and Hamas.
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United States41548 Posts
On May 19 2021 17:43 Magic Powers wrote:Show nested quote +On May 19 2021 17:25 KwarK wrote:On May 19 2021 17:15 Magic Powers wrote:On May 19 2021 16:50 KwarK wrote: The better option to firebombing the civilian population of Dresden would be not firebombing the civilian population of Dresden. Not only would it save on fuel and reduce carbon emissions, it would also avoid a hundred thousand people dying in a firestorm. Germany wasn't playing nice with Britain. They played very dirty by bombing innocent, defenseless civilians, and the war was close to being lost for Britain numerous times. Defeat would've meant absolute disaster for Britain and perhaps the world, as Hitler made no secret about his terrifying plans. And it wasn't just the Nazis, as Japan was a convenient ally of the Third Reich, and they weren't up to anything good either. Germany was also coming dangerously close to attaining nuclear powers. What Britain did to Germany in WW2 was a desperate attempt at saving humankind from a worse fate. They had to make decisions that went far beyond anything prior. If you think this is even remotely comparable to the Israel-Hamas situation, then I'll have to end our debate. To be clear, are you now arguing that the firebombing of Dresden prevented Hitler from getting nuclear weapons? If not, what the hell are you talking about? I'm arguing Britain had a lot greater fears during WW2 than Israel in its conflict with Hamas. The Nazis turned Germany and all Germans (and other nations) into a single-minded war factory, every single citizen was involved in the war in some capacity, and those who weren't involved got exploited for the sake of war. There was nothing else. "Total war" is a term that stems from that time. "Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg?" ("Do you want total war?") is in a speech from Goebbels after Germany had failed to conquer Russia numerous times. Britain, knowing this, had to take very drastic actions. It's not even remotely comparable to anything today. The bombing of Dresden is a hotly debated issue among historians, with some taking the stance that it was a war crime and others arguing that it had strategic relevance. I think they're both partially right, which means I think it's right to label the mission a war crime, and it's also right that - without needless attacks on civilians - it would've simply been essential to the British war efforts. It needs to be said though that the British had faced an enemy who could've defeated them, who had conquered much of the world, who could've conquered much more of the world, an enemy who was terrifyingly brutal to civilians everywhere. With the prospect of losing a war to such an enemy, it can't be compared 1:1 to Hamas. At least Hamas is mainly using retaliation, as much as I or anyone else disagrees with their reasoning or methods. Germany wasn't retaliating. I think you might actually be an evil person. I brought up a classic example of a war crime to show why what Israel did was wrong and you made a series of posts defending the war crime with nonsensical claims about Japan, nuclear weapons, and the prospect of Nazi Germany turning it WW2 around in mid 1945.
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Norway28492 Posts
On May 19 2021 17:24 Nebuchad wrote: There is one cool thing about the Israel-Palestine conflict, and it's that the discourse has shifted dramatically. Last time this happened we had the discussion online and there were people making solid arguments on both sides, we had a little battle on the marketplace of ideas, and the people on the side of Palestine won that battle.
Which means that this time, support for Palestine is overwhelming in leftist places online. So, what can I say, when you're dealing with honest people who have a common goal, debate works, sort of. Leftist online places are set to raise more for Palestine than they did for Mermaids when Glinner decided to direct his constant transphobia at them. Especially Vaush has had a very successful stream, 250k+ in 24 hours.
Will charity solve the occupation, no it won't obviously. But it still signals that we have a pretty large voice, and that's cool. Other cracks start to form with larger protests all over the world, less pro-Israel propaganda in the media than usual (I have no explanation for that one but 1) hey, cool, I'll take it, and 2) there is still some dumb shit going around.
Imo one of the more important rhetorical battles to fight is the battle against the idea that it's complicated. One side has almost all of the power and chooses to oppress the other, openly using terrorism and openly supporting ethnic cleansing. Don't be on that side.
Some things are complicated, others are not. The continued settlements is not complicated - they're abhorrent and so is supporting them. Amusingly, I've yet to see anyone defend this practice, even guys that are solidly on the side of Israel. They seem to conveniently ignore that this is the piece of aggression and argue that 'Israel has the right to defend itself' - but I haven't actually seen anyone in this thread or the USPol thread before the discussion moved defend the continued settlement policy.
However, while people seem to be able to agree that Israel's settlement policy should end, figuring out where to revert back to is complicated. 1967 borders are two generations ago. We might agree that what happened in 1947-48 was a crime against the Palestinian people, but it's not like it's easy to revert that now. The question of 'who should live where' is complicated, even if we recognize that Israel is the main culprit in the conflict and even if we regard Hamas as freedom fighters more than as terrorists.
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On May 19 2021 17:25 KwarK wrote: To be clear, are you now arguing that the firebombing of Dresden prevented Hitler from getting nuclear weapons? If not, what the hell are you talking about?
I'm noticing that you've started to assume things about what I may be arguing ("are you saying that...?"), and I'll say right now that I don't play like that. I'll answer this question, but if you do this again I'll end our debate.
I'm talking about the context of Britain facing an enemy showing a level of determined brutality that the world hasn't seen before. The context is quite different. Many historians are arguing to this day whether those bombings should be considered a war crime or not. I don't think I have the level of insight to say anything for sure, considering how divided the historians are.
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On May 19 2021 17:47 KwarK wrote: I think you might actually be an evil person. I brought up a classic example of a war crime to show why what Israel did was wrong and you made a series of posts defending the war crime with nonsensical claims about Japan, nuclear weapons, and the prospect of Nazi Germany turning it WW2 around in mid 1945.
Ok we're done then. I do not think you're evil, and I see no reason for you to claim that I'm evil. Even "might" is unacceptable. We're done.
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